out of fifteen hundred elected dele- gates. ) Radio Gottwaldov came on the air? and the Lomm unist Party district lead- e )- 1 i d t h 11 G H 1: \.-V tl d () v h u I h u.. ( H 11 L Ha dead CJty.H Hlgnore them," he said. "Keep your doors and windows closed. . . . ""\1 e must InakL a distinc- tion between the Soviet leadership and the Russian people. .L-1. Russian girl who works here will speak to you now." The girl, speaking in a soft voice, aid that she was terrified, and also thdt she was sure Inost soldiers didn't know where the} were or wh) they were thel e. She went on: I "V\ì d.S so happy when I sa", Comrades Brezhnev and Dubcek on television em- bracing each other.... I hope ,vith all my heart that someday you will forget whd.t happened here, but I am d.fr åid- yes, I knO\\T-that the feeling between our two nations \vill never be vvhat it v\ìas before. The National .L ssernhly, which was in permanent sess;on in its ten1porary headquarters on Jindrisská Street, is- sued a proclarnation that WetS hroadcast an over Czechoslovakia. The invasion had gross]) violated international law, it said; an interned Czechoslovak lead- ers must he released at once, and all occupation troops ll1USt leave instantly. Citizens were asked not to Plovoke the in vaJers; if necessary, the last rneans of resistance would he a general strike It was the strongest statement issued so far, although the deputies in the Assem- hly meetIng were virtual prisoners, sur- rounded by Soviet tanks. ] ust before the \V riters' Union buildIng on Národní trIda (National A venue) was occupied, a In an there sclid: This IS our last message to you, friends. Remem ber, we are all together no,v; there are no differences of origin ld.nguage, religion, race. More than ever we are aware of our historic mission in the fight for truth and freedom.... Keep up the fight. Don't ever give in. Do only ,vhat has to he done. Help us to protect the sovereignty of our country. The editors of Litrrární List)' greet- ed the Czechoslovak people "in this hour of our WOI st ordeal" and an- nounced that a special edition was now heing distributed. The) asked every- body to join them "in the fight for the truth to the hitter end." The national la wyers' association appealed to jurists all over the world "to help in this struggle for legalitv, hUll1dnity, free- dom." A WOll1an announcer selid that the network was getting so man) mes- sages that it was impossihle to hroad- Celst all of them. Prague sWItched to 85 Look at a Steinway@ with your ear. \. \. \ )- 'Ø What you see with your eye, handsome as it is, is not what makes a Steinway, a Steinway. It's the sound that's unique. The Diaphragmatic'); Soundboard was invented and is patented by Steinway & Sons. It's precisely constructed to taper in thickness from center to edges, much like the tuned skin of a kettle drum This design swells the sound of the vibrating string to a full, resounding tone. No one has yet devised a suitable copy or even a substitute. This sound of Steinway is the reason almost every great pianist you can think of will play no other piano. It can make you sound good, too. Steinway & Sons For information, write. John Stein way, Steinway Hall, III.West 57th Street, New York, 10019 (1)